Showing posts with label Interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Interview. Show all posts

NEW VIDEO INTERVIEW: Robert Pattinson & Elizabeth Debicki Talk 'Tenet' To Kinowetter

 NEW VIDEO INTERVIEW: Robert Pattinson & Elizabeth Debicki Talk 'Tenet' To Kinowetter

Hoping for some more video interviews for Tenet promo coming our way soon! 

 

In the meantime don't forget today is DC FanDome so make sure to get yourself signed up HERE to see 'The Batman' Panel this evening. Once you sign yourself up and select your country the time will show in your timezone. It's on at 5.30pm PT (which for me is 1.30am) but there will be 2 repeats tomorrow so plenty of chances to see it.

INTERVIEWS: Robert Pattinson talks to the NY Times, San Francisco Chronicle and more about The Lighthouse

INTERVIEWS: Robert Pattinson talks to the NY Times, San Francisco Chronicle and more about The Lighthouse

Time for you to grab a cuppa (did I say that right, Kate?) and sit down with all these great Rob interviews! Also while gazing at the beautiful pictures!

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Rob spoke with the New York Times, Datebook from the San Francisco Chronicle via the Datebook Podcast, and The Frame Podcast.

First up, an excerpt from the NY Times: What Can Robert Pattinson Do to Keep You Guessing?
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After “Twilight,” the actor reinvented himself in art-house films. How will he follow “The Lighthouse” and his wildest role so far? With yet another swerve: He’s playing Batman.
Is it fair to say you’re drawn to eccentric characters?
I’ve always thought that the only reason you’d want to play a good guy all the time is because you’re desperately ashamed of what you’re doing in real life, whereas if you’re a pretty normal person, the most fun part of doing movies is that you can explore the more grotesque or naughty sides of your psyche in a somewhat safe environment. And it’s always more fun if you’re shocking the people in the room. If you end up being boring, that’s the lowest of the low.

Do you think you’ve been boring before?
All the time. You can bore yourself! On “The Lighthouse,” I’d do two out of 17 takes that work, and on the other ones, I’d roll the dice in a different direction that leads me nowhere. But it’s more fun doing that than making a plan and sticking to it.


What was the first day of shooting “The Lighthouse” like?
Well, my first shot was this ferocious masturbation scene. It’s always nice to do something massive for your opening shot, and I went really massive on the first take. It was a 180 from everything we’d done in rehearsal, and I could see Robert [Eggers] a little in shock afterward. But I was like, “O.K., cool, I didn’t get told to stop, so I’ll keep going in that direction.” As soon as I’d done that, it was like the road started getting paved.
Click HERE to visit NYTimes and read the entire interview.




Now, an excerpt from SF Chronical's Datebook interview: Robert Pattinson recalls Stonestown mall riot and getting weird in ‘Lighthouse’

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Q: I was worried you were going to lose more than a button seeing your physically demanding performance in “The Lighthouse.” How did you get to a place where you could portray that type of isolation and insanity?

A: The script was so kind of audacious, there were moments with things in it I’d never seen anything like it in any other script. You realize you had to take a kind of running jump to kind of even reach any of it. I’m attracted to scripts where you first read it, it’s very engaging and you feel, “Wow, this has got some kind of totemic qualities, something really primal and powerful about it.” And it’s also working with Willem, I’ve seen the amount of energy that Willem can bring to a performance, so I kind of knew that it was going to be an adversarial type of relationship.

Q: Did you and Willem do any kind of exercises to get to a place where you were comfortable enough to do some of these very physically intimate scenes?

A: We rehearsed for a week, Willem loves rehearsing and I really dislike it, which is kind of handy for our relationship. We did five days of rehearsing and I just found it to be the most incredibly stressful thing in the world. By the time we were shooting with each other, there was already this weird tension, it’s the opposite of what’s supposed to happen from rehearsals, normally it’s supposed to get people relaxed with each other. I love Willem, he’s such a lovely personable guy but there was this strange energy.
Click HERE to read the entire article.

The interview was also recorded and posted on Datebook's podcast. You know you want to listen to Rob! Plus, they written version is edited. Unedited Rob is the BEST.

Click HERE to scroll down and listen to Rob's interview on Datebook's Podcast!

Our final interview is another podcast, The Frame. 16 minutes of pleasure. Ready?
Click HERE to listen to more Rob!

Photos: NYTimes | Datebook |

INTERVIEW: Robert Pattinson, Robert Eggers & Willem Dafoe At The Hollywood Reporter Studio

INTERVIEW: Robert Pattinson, Robert Eggers & Willem Dafoe At The Hollywood Reporter Studio

Great interview. I'm so looking forward to seeing this movie!

Click on the pic below to watch

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You Tube



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NEW: Picture of Robert Pattinson with Mia Wasikowska and Zellner Bros + new interview: "He’s deeply, deeply mad. I was approaching it like that."

NEW: Picture of Robert Pattinson with Mia Wasikowska and Zellner Bros + new interview: "He’s deeply, deeply mad. I was approaching it like that."

Great new picture of Rob with the gang for LA Times!

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These are the screen caps of the accompanying article.

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Indiewire has a new interview with Rob too.

Excerpt from Indiewire, Robert Pattinson on the Male Gaze, Playing a Psychopath, and the Status of His Many Upcoming Arthouse Movies:
The actor told IndieWire that he didn't quite know what he was getting himself into with the Zellner brothers' oddball western, but that's sort of his thing these days. 
When Robert Pattinson first received the script for the David and Nathan Zellners’ “Damsel,” a quirky, inverted western in which various cockeyed suitors pine for love of a woman disinterested in their advances, he passed. “It just seemed like one of those things that’s never going to get financing, so it just didn’t really register with me,” he said.

A few weeks later, he went to see “Kumiko, the Treasure Hunter” in theaters, not realizing it came from the same sibling director pair. He called his agent, eager to meet whoever was behind it.

“He was like, yeah, you just got offered a role for their new movie and you didn’t meet with them,” Pattinson recalled. He circled back on “Damsel,” which sees him entering strange terrain for an actor whose penchant for stone-faced roles has evolved from the “Twilight” franchise to auteur-driven work like David Cronenberg’s “Cosmopolis” and the Safdie brothers’ “Good Time.” 
As Samuel Alabaster, the foolishly overconfident pioneer eager to rescue Penelope (Mia Wasichowska) from her supposed captors even though she may not want the help, Pattinson found himself in the unlikely position of a comedic role. That was something he didn’t expect when he signed up, in part because the melancholic “Kumiko” — in which a Japanese woman, believing the plot of “Fargo” to be real, gets lost in Nebraska — had a totally different feel. “Kumiko’ is one of the strangest movies ever,” Pattinson said. “To have such an odd movie and make it coherent and kind of touching, the aesthetic of it is really elegant of it, and kind of cool, too — they had a lot going on at the same time. Connecting that with the script for ‘Damsel’ felt really left field to me.”

When he read “Damsel,” he said, “it didn’t read necessarily as a straight comedy, it just felt really odd.” Still trying to figure how to classify the movie after production wrapped, he dug back into the Zellners’ filmography and watched “Kid-Thing,” their dark, lyrical story of a young girl who hears a voice down the well. Unlike “Kumiko,” the Zellners’ first project on a bigger budget, “Kid-Thing” conveys their off-beat, deadpan humor in clearer terms. He recognized that while “Kumiko” had a “stately” feel to it, the Austin-based filmmakers’ other movies were “more ramshackle.”

Still, “Damsel” doesn’t signal some new phase of Pattinson’s career in studio rom-coms. While Samuel commands the first act of the movie, his obsession with finding the girl of his dreams required the actor play it straight. “The guy is completely psychotic,” Pattinson said. “He’s never done anything more nefarious than annoying people, but his capacity for delusion is kind of frightening. He’s not a bumbling moron. His actions are very premeditated. He’s deeply, deeply mad. I was approaching it like that.” 
In one standout moment from the movie, Samuel performs an entire song on acoustic guitar that he’s written for Penelope. Searching for a way to categorize the movie he was making, he hoped to make the crew laugh. “There were scenes where nobody was laughing,” he said. “I was trying to get a reaction from people. With that song, I finally saw the boom operator smiling, and it was the biggest relief.”
Click HERE to read the entire interview!

Source: LATimes | Source: Indiewire | Caps: Nancy

VIDEO INTERVIEW: 36 Minutes With Robert Pattinson

VIDEO INTERVIEW: 36 Minutes With Robert Pattinson

Would have been handy if I'd had a warning about the close up at the start of this interview. I took me a while to recover but hey 36 mintues with Rob. It's like Christmas has come early!

Robert Pattinson on the cover of Time Out London (Nov 14)





VIDEO: Vice Canada Interview Robert Pattinson, Josh & Benny Safdie

VIDEO: Vice Canada Interview Robert Pattinson, Josh & Benny Safdie

Josh reminds me of David Cronenberg when he's talking about Rob's face in this interview.



Thanks Nancy

Robert Pattinson talks about his acting process, Good Time, Damsel and more!

Robert Pattinson talks about his acting process, Good Time, Damsel and more!

This was a solid interview from Business Insider while Rob was doing press in NYC this past week.

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From Business Insider, Robert Pattinson opens up about his insecurities and his career-defining new movie:

Robert Pattinson may be known best for the role that made him into a global superstar and tabloid obsession, playing Edward Cullen in the “Twilight” franchise, but he’s making it very hard for everyone to keep him in that box.

In his latest movie, “Good Time” (in select theaters Friday, nationwide August 25), Pattinson gives the best performance of his career so far playing Connie, a petty criminal who sets out on a mission to bail his mentally challenged brother out of prison. After the two botch a bank robbery, we follow Connie in a bizarre journey through New York, in which everything he does completely goes wrong. To morph into a greasy Queens hood, the 31-year-old actor spent months working with directors Josh and Benny Safdie (Benny plays Connie’s brother in the movie) before shooting began, which included dressing in character and doing improvised performances with Benny in public.

With a cluster of eager paparazzi waiting outside, Business Insider chatter with Pattinson at the Bowery Hotel in New York City to discuss his new role, why he spends so much time on movie websites, and with more “Twilight” movies to come, if he’d ever consider playing Edward Cullen again.

Jason Guerrasio: You've said in interviews that it's seeing a picture of the Safdie's last movie, "Heaven Knows What," that sparked the interest to work with them. What were you searching for creatively back at that time?

Robert Pattinson: That. I mean, I don't do anything else. I literally f---ing look at film websites all day long. [Laughs]

Guerrasio: Wow. 

Pattinson: Also book review websites, anything where there could be something. I guess I'm trying to figure out what could potentially be a zeitgeist-type thing. Something that will connect. And it's very, very difficult to find anything that's in the zeitgeist. 

Guerrasio: So your process in choosing roles is different from the traditional method in Hollywood of an agent sending you material. You're searching for the material.

Pattinson: I think it's so much more than the script. I did a movie after "Good Time" [titled “Damsel”] which was from a script and it's funny. But originally I read it and I didn't get it. And then I saw this movie, "Kumiko, the Treasure Hunter," which the directors, the Zellner brothers, had done previously, and I called my agent and said, "Who are these guys?" And he was like, "You just got offered their movie and you said 'no,'" and I was like, "Oh, s---! Wait!" [Laughs] I think you just need so many elements. And I'm just one of those people who thinks if you've made something good once, even if it was a long time ago, I think —

Guerrasio: They've still got a good one in them.

Pattinson: Yeah. Because hardly anybody has made anything good. 

Guerrasio: But with the Safdies you see this image, you're intrigued, but what happens if you go to meet them and they could be awful people. Did you vet them a little first?

Pattinson: No. I had seen the trailer for "Heaven Knows What," and I had such a strong impression of them I knew I was right. The editing, use of music, it's just bold. I remember seeing "Heaven Knows What" for the first time and just the volume of the music I was like, "Jesus, it's deafening."  

Guerrasio: So in your eyes, even if these guys were complete pricks, you could deal with it because you dig what they do?

Pattinson: Yeah. 100 percent. It worked out, because I really like them. But at the end of the day you're doing it to make something. 

Guerrasio: Not make best friends with them. 

Pattinson: And sometimes it's kind of good if you hate the person. [Laughs] The film production was only three months, I think you can basically do anything in three months. 

Guerrasio: There was so much prep to this movie. Was it fun to get made up and walk around New York City and not be recognized? As opposed to right now, we're in a lobby of a hotel and paparazzi are right at the front door waiting for you.

Pattinson: It's a satisfying experience to do that. I'm trying to make something every time that feels new and surprises people. Hopefully at least one person. But it's not like I turn it off. I don't make a movie and then go back to my normal life. When I'm finishing one movie the next day I'm thinking about the next one.

Guerrasio: Is that because you want that? You want to be busy?

Pattinson: Yeah. But also, most of the time I'm by myself finding the next thing. Being an A&R guy, basically. I don't know how long I can do this for. I'm constantly fascinated by actors who are so confident with their career that they do a project and then go on vacation. 

Guerrasio: And then there are the actors that say "no" to everything. 

Pattinson: Oh, I say "no" to everything, too. But because I like such few things, when I take a role I just go into prep and that takes time, even for small roles I do that. 

Click HERE to keep reading!

Glimpse Of Robert Pattinson, Josh & Benny Safdie Appearing On Charlie Rose

Glimpse Of Robert Pattinson, Josh & Benny Safdie Appearing On Charlie Rose

So it looks like the Good Time team are doing an interview with Charlie Rose. Josh posted the little video below (featuring Rob) on his insta stories.
I need to apologise now because this Irish person has NO idea who Charlie Rose is, but I can tell you that as soon as the interview is available we will post it up!

VIDEO INTERVIEW: Robert Pattinson & Safdie Brothers Talk To The Hollywood Reporter About 'Good Time'

VIDEO INTERVIEW: Robert Pattinson & Safdie Brothers Talk To The Hollywood Reporter About 'Good Time'

So many great interviews with Rob, Josh & Benny from this Good Time promotion. Here's another one to add to the collection. This time it's a 15min long interview with The Hollywood Reporter.
Grab a coffee and get comfortable and check out the video below.

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Source

VIDEO: Mind Food Magazine Get 5 Minutes With Robert Pattinson

VIDEO: Mind Food Magazine Get 5 Minutes With Robert Pattinson


via Julia
Thanks Mel

AUDIO: THR's Scott Feinberg Has A Great With Chat Robert Pattinson In 'Awards Chatter' Podcast

AUDIO: THR's Scott Feinberg Has A Great With Chat Robert Pattinson In 'Awards Chatter' Podcast

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Describing your perfect Sunday morning would surely include a 40 min podcast of Robert Pattinson to listen to over breakfast right? (Let's be honest that would be every morning if I had my way)
Well we can totally help with you that this morning. 

Just click below (give it a couple of seconds to load) to hear Rob's dulcet tones as he chats to Scott Feinberg from THR for his Awards Chatter Podcast where he talks about his excitement for Good Time, working with David Cronenberg and Werner Herzog, his Twilight days, his fans and lots more. 





If you have trouble listening above listen over at The Hollywood Reporter

VIDEO: Robert Pattinson, in very cool shades, chats about Good Time and working with the Safdie brothers

VIDEO: Robert Pattinson, in very cool shades, chats about Good Time and working with the Safdie brothers 

Rob's interview is first and then the Safdie bros also talk about casting Rob and Good Time.
Rob also pops up again just before the 4:00 minute mark.

NEW: Robert Pattinson talks about Good Time, choosing indies, working with Claire Denis and more!

NEW: Robert Pattinson talks about Good Time, choosing indies, working with Claire Denis and more!

image hostThis is a translation but if you understand French, click HERE to read!

From Le Parisien:

Cannes 2017. Robert Pattinson: “I finally look like an adult”

He is unrecognizable in “Good Time,” a film in official competition.  In this electric drama directed by the Safdie brothers, Robert Pattinson plays a robber in the shallows of New York. Meet the beautiful boy revealed by the “Twilight” saga, now 31 years old.

Is not that (Good Time) your best role?

Robert Pattinson: What is certain is that it was one of my favorite experiences.  It was such a crazy adventure.  At the beginning, there wasn’t even a script and then, we find ourselves in competition in Cannes …

This is your fourth Festival.  Do you feel at home?

R: I love coming here.  For me, it is the pinnacle to present a film.

You have contacted the Safdie brothers after seeing a photo of their movie “Mad Love in New York” …

R: Yes.  I found the image so beautiful and moving that I said, “I want to shoot with these people.  And then I met them.  They are so intelligent and good people.  I told them I was ready to do whatever they wanted.

This is where the Safdie wrote this role for you.  What do you have in common with your character?

R: His anxiety (laughs).  And like Connie, before, in New York, I spent most of my time on the street trying to hide myself.  Instinctively, I kept looking around to avoid the paparazzi.

This is no longer the case?

R: In London, where I live most of the time, people would rather see the reality show heroes and footballers.  And in Los Angeles, where I am often, paparazzi make less money because magazines publish photos from Instagram, so it’s better.

You’ve totally changed the look for this character …

R: Yes.  Usually, I look like a 22 year old kid.  There, they made me false acne scars, I have darker hair … I finally look like an adult.

How was the shoot?

R: It was extremely bad for my health!  I slept very little.  The night work was almost always sixteen or seventeen hours in a row.  We were in a bubble.  It was very intense and stressful.

Since the end of "Twilight”, you choose independent films on a small budget.  Why ?

R: When I choose a film, I don’t wonder if it will be a success or not.  If it’s a low budget film, I say to myself: “I will do another after.”  What I want is to surprise.  However, commercial films are designed not to disturb the public.  I find them boring to see and make.

You must soon shoot with the French director Claire Denis …

R: Yes, this summer normally.  I had seen his movie "White Material” on television eight years ago and I found it an outstanding performance.  I wanted to work with her.  When I met her, she had a role for a guy who was 50 years old … But during the appointment, I felt her changing her mind.

Kristen Stewart (Ed: his former co-star in “Twilight” and ex) was in Cannes to present her short film.  Did you meet her?

 R: No.

Are you still in touch?

R: Not really (laughs).

Le Parisian review:
"Good Time": a nocturnal and hypnotic thriller *****

Robert Pattinson, unrecognizable in “Good Time."  … Connie (Robert Pattinson) is hunted, and his look hallucinated in a frenzied race punctuated with bursts of violence.  Some scenes - like the pursuit in an amusement park - are ultra-cinematic.  And Pattinson impresses with this feverish interpretation.

"Good Time,” Theatrical release October 11 in France.

Source | Translation: Pattinson 360

NEW PIC: Robert Pattinson and Charlie Hunnam sitting for The Lost City of Z press junket (April 7)

NEW PIC: Robert Pattinson and Charlie Hunnam sitting for The Lost City of Z press junket (April 7)

From the hashtags, this looks like the Good Morning America interview we'll see on April 11th. Click HERE if you missed other pics from the junket.

NEW PIC: Robert Pattinson Doing Press For 'The Lost City Of Z' In LA (7th April)

NEW PIC: Robert Pattinson Doing Press For 'The Lost City Of Z' In LA (7th April)

Loving the shirt

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Caption on insta:
Such a pleasure to work with and meet these two! Robert Pattinson and Charlie Hunnam in The Lost City of Z .... great interview , great men #GMA #ABC #mensgrooming #production #mua💄 #featurefilm #netflix #goodlife #blessed

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Audio: 'I Really Love Rob, He's A Really Fine Actor' Anton Corbin On Robert Pattinson, 'Life' & More

Audio: 'I Really Love Rob, He's A Really Fine Actor' Anton Corbin On Robert Pattinson, 'Life' & More

Picturehouse did an audio interview with Anton Corbijn recently. It's quite similar to some of the other interviews we've heard and read in the past but I'll never get tired of hearing Anton talking about what a fine actor Rob is and how Rob is the lead in the movie.

Life talk starts around the 12min mark.

New Robert Pattinson interview in ‘Wiener Zeitung’

New Robert Pattinson interview in ‘Wiener Zeitung’

Another new interview with Rob. This time it's from ‘Wiener Zeitung’ (Austria). It's similar to what we've heard before but some new parts as well. Enjoy!

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Source / via

WATCH: 'Life' B-Roll & Interview With Robert Pattinson & Dane DeHaan

WATCH: 'Life' B-Roll & Interview With Robert Pattinson & Dane DeHaan

UPDATE: Added An Interview with Robert Pattinson below





Thanks DeanDeHaan.org

INTERVIEW: Robert Pattinson Talks 'Life', Jamie Dornan & How He Likes Working With Australians With 'The Weekend Western'

INTERVIEW: Robert Pattinson Talks 'Life', Jamie Dornan & How He Likes Working With Australians With 'The Weekend Western'

This interview with Rob in The Weekend Western's Seven Days Magazine (Australia) contains some new quotes from Rob where he talks about Life, his good friend Jamie Dornan, how he tends to gravitate towards working with Australians and more!

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Click To Read

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